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The Cabot Trail is a scenic highway on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada. [1] It is a 298 km (185 mi) loop around the northern tip of the island, passing along and through the Cape Breton Highlands and the Cape Breton Highlands National Park .
Cabots Landing Provincial Park (official spelling Cabot's Landing Provincial Park) [1] is a small picnic and beach park on the shore of Aspy Bay in the community of Sugarloaf, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of the Cabot Trail on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada.
The Cabot Trail is a scenic road circuit around and over the Cape Breton Highlands with spectacular coastal vistas; over 400,000 visitors drive the Cabot Trail each summer and fall. Coupled with the Fortress of Louisbourg , it has driven the growth of the tourism industry on the island in recent decades.
The Skyline Trail is a seven-kilometre, looping, hiking trail at Cape Breton Highlands National Park in Nova Scotia, Canada. It lies on the western side of the Cabot Trail, near French Mountain's summit. This trail is well known for its scenic views, but also for the 2009 fatal coyote assault on Taylor Mitchell. The trail’s busy hours are ...
The reservoir was created in the late 1920s by Molly's Falls Electric, Light and Power Company, with a hydropower dam and buildings to generate electricity for the Marshfield, Vermont area. [1] Vermont Land Trust purchased 1,029 acres from Green Mountain Power in 2012 so that the State could eventually acquire the land. Green Mountain Power ...
Route information; Maintained by Nova Scotia Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal: Length: 13 km [1] (8.1 mi) Major junctions; South end: Hwy 105 (TCH) in South Haven: North end: Trunk 30 in River Bennet: Location; Country: Canada: Province: Nova Scotia: Counties: Victoria: Highway system; Provincial highways in Nova Scotia ...
The Aspy Fault (/ ˈ æ s p i /) [1] is a strike-slip fault that runs through 40 km of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia and is often thought to be a part of the Cabot Fault/ Great Glen Fault system of Avalonia. [2] [3] Part of the fault runs through Cape Breton Highlands National Park. This fault runs southward from Cape North through the Margaree Valley.
Cabot is a six-mile-square New England town located in the northeast corner of Washington County, Vermont, United States.The population was 1,443 at the 2020 census.It contains the unincorporated villages of Cabot Village, Cabot Plain, South Cabot (Hookerville), East Cabot, Lower Cabot, and West Hill.